For Orlando residents and visitors physically in Florida — downtown, Lake Nona, Winter Park, Kissimmee, Sanford, and the I-Drive tourist corridor. Licensed Florida telehealth for UTIs, BV, yeast, ED, hair loss, and bridge refills. $45 flat, same-day e-prescriptions to any Orlando pharmacy. No insurance, no subscription, no taking a half-day off Disney or your shift.
Same $45 flat fee for every visit. Pick the intake that matches your situation.
Visiting Orlando? If you developed a UTI, yeast infection, or another treatable condition during your trip, we can help — as long as you're physically in Florida at the time of your visit. We serve Florida and 11 other licensed states. If you're visiting Orlando from one of our 12 states, yes. If you're visiting from outside that list, we'll refund you immediately and point you to walk-in urgent care.
Tourism changes the telehealth math. Orlando hosts roughly 74 million visitors per year (pre-pandemic, Visit Orlando) — more than any other U.S. destination. A meaningful share of those visitors develop routine conditions during their trip: UTIs after pool time, yeast infections from sustained humidity and swimwear, travelers' prescription refill needs for a forgotten medication bottle. Florida is our licensing state, so the key question is always "are you physically in Florida right now" — if yes, we can treat you. If no, we can't, regardless of where your home is.
Our 12 licensed states. We can prescribe to patients physically located in: Florida, Texas, California, New York, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, North Carolina, Illinois, Washington, and Virginia. If you're visiting Orlando from one of those states, welcome — we can treat you. If you're visiting from Alabama, Arizona, Tennessee, or any other state outside our coverage, we can't prescribe to you on this Orlando trip. We refund automatically if you start a visit and the intake catches a non-covered location.
Theme park worker reality. Orlando's theme park and hospitality workforce — Disney Cast Members, Universal Team Members, SeaWorld Ambassadors, hotel and restaurant staff — is substantial. Many face non-traditional schedules that make daytime urgent care visits impossible without losing shifts. Async telehealth fits this schedule: submit the intake during a break, get reviewed within 2 hours, pick up medication on the drive home. Disney's Cast Member benefits include telehealth through their own provider network, but many Cast Members prefer cash-pay for privacy — especially for BV, yeast, or ED visits they'd rather not route through employer-adjacent plans.
Pharmacy density near the tourist corridor. I-Drive, the Disney area (Lake Buena Vista, Celebration, Kissimmee), and the Universal area (International Drive south, Sand Lake Road, Kirkman Road) all have unusually dense pharmacy coverage because of tourist demand. You can essentially walk from any I-Drive hotel to a CVS or Walgreens within 10 minutes, and several of those locations are 24-hour. This is a genuine geographic advantage Orlando has over other Florida metros — pharmacy access is often better in the tourist corridor than in a typical suburban neighborhood.
Orlando hospital landscape. Three systems dominate: AdventHealth (formerly Florida Hospital) operates the largest local network including AdventHealth Orlando downtown, AdventHealth Celebration (Disney-adjacent), AdventHealth East Orlando, AdventHealth Winter Park, AdventHealth Altamonte Springs, and many smaller community hospitals. Orlando Health runs Orlando Regional Medical Center (Orange Avenue flagship, Level I trauma), Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children, Winnie Palmer Hospital for Women & Babies, Dr. P. Phillips Hospital, and Orlando Health Horizon West. Nemours Children's Hospital (Lake Nona) is the major pediatric specialty destination. For our scope, these are referral destinations when telehealth isn't appropriate.
Unusually dense pharmacy coverage thanks to tourism. What Orlando patients and visitors use most:
For visitors: pick an Orlando pharmacy that's close to your hotel, Airbnb, or theme park exit. Our e-prescription works the same way for a tourist as for a resident.
Our scope is uncomplicated outpatient care. Anything beyond that belongs in person. Options:
For walk-in urgent care, CentraCare (AdventHealth-affiliated), Orlando Health UrgentCare, and MD Now have dozens of locations across the metro. Typical out-of-pocket $150–250.
If you're an adult physically in Florida during your visit, yes — we can treat you. We're licensed in 12 states (FL, TX, CA, NY, GA, PA, OH, MI, NC, IL, WA, VA). Visitors from any of those states: welcome. Visitors from outside: refunded automatically.
Async telehealth is usually fastest. Hotel house-call services run $200–400. Walk-in urgent care is $150–250 plus transportation. Our $45 visit is reviewed under 2 hours, and the I-Drive / theme park corridor has dense 24-hour pharmacy coverage for same-day pickup.
Yes. Irregular shifts make daytime urgent care hard. Async telehealth works around your schedule: intake on break, review within 2 hours, pickup on your way home. Many Cast Members use cash-pay for privacy on BV, yeast, or ED visits rather than routing through employer plans.
Identical. Our Florida licensure covers all of Orange, Seminole, Osceola, and Lake counties. Same $45 flat, same same-day prescriptions to any local pharmacy.
AdventHealth Celebration (in Celebration/Kissimmee, minutes from the Disney gates) is the closest full-service hospital. Orlando Health Horizon West is next-closest for the southwest side. For Universal / I-Drive, AdventHealth Orlando or ORMC downtown are the standard ER destinations.
24-hour CVS locations on I-Drive, Lake Nona, East Orlando, and Winter Park. 24-hour Walgreens on Kirkman Road, Sand Lake Road, and Semoran Boulevard. Best options for pickups after 10 PM.